A Layperson Introduction to the Quantum Approach to Humor
Liane Gabora, Samantha Thomson, and Kirsty Kitto

TL;DR
This paper introduces the quantum cognitive approach to humor, emphasizing how it models ambiguity and context in understanding why certain jokes are funny, supported by recent empirical evidence.
Contribution
It presents a novel quantum-based cognitive model of humor that captures ambiguity and contextuality, offering a new perspective in humor psychology research.
Findings
Quantum approach effectively models humor-related ambiguity.
Empirical study supports the quantum cognitive model.
Highlights role of context in humor comprehension.
Abstract
Despite our familiarity with and fondness of humor, until relatively recently very little was known about the underlying psychology of this complex and nuanced phenomenon. Recently, however, cognitive psychologists have begun investigating how people understand humor and why we find certain things funny. This chapter introduces a new cognitive approach to modeling humor that we refer to as the 'quantum approach', which will be explained here in intuitive, non-mathematical terms later (a formal treatment can be found in Gabora & Kitto, 2017). What makes the quantum approach a promising candidate for a theory of humor is that it can be useful for representing states of ambiguity, and it defines states and variables with reference to a context. Contextuality and ambiguity both play a key role in humor, which often hangs on an ambiguous word, phrase, or situation that might not make sense,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHumor Studies and Applications · Language, Metaphor, and Cognition
